Abstract

Results from MAST concerning the effect of toroidal rotation driven by neutral beam injection (NBI) on sawteeth are presented. The sawtooth period is shown to increase as the co-NBI power, and thus the toroidal plasma rotation, is increased. As the counter-NBI power is increased, the sawtooth period decreases to a minimum that is shorter than in Ohmically heated plasmas, before lengthening at high toroidal flows. The sawtooth period reaches a minimum when the sawtooth precursor changes the direction of rotation. This can be interpreted as the counter-NBI inducing a toroidal flow which balances the intrinsic ion diamagnetic rotation of the plasma, at which point the mode precursor changes direction. Magnetohydrodynamic stability analyses of the ideal n = 1 internal kink mode with respect to toroidal rotation at finite ion diamagnetic frequency show good accordance with the experimental results. When MAST discharges are modelled at the experimental ion diamagnetic frequency, , the ideal n = 1 internal kink mode is stabilized completely by co-rotation approaching the ion sound speed. When the rotation is oriented in the counter- direction, the mode is initially driven more unstable, before being stabilized by high toroidal flows. Experimentally, the radial extent of the sawtooth crash, and hence the q = 1 surface, varies with respect to the sawtooth period. Stability analyses show that the marginally stable radial location of the q = 1 surface reaches a minimum at approximately the same counter-toroidal rotation as that which minimizes the sawtooth period experimentally. The magnitude of the toroidal rotation at the q = 1 surface determines the stabilizing effect of the toroidal flow upon the ideal n = 1 internal kink mode.

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